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Reinvention as a Life Skill

August 19, 2015

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Ask any group of people if they’re doing today what they thought they’d be doing when they started out. I begin every speech that way; occasionally, a few people in the audience raise their hands (very few). Almost everyone will readily admit that they’ve had to reinvent themselves, multiple times over, in their lives and careers. And yet, if you ask how they did it, or if formal education prepared them for reinvention, you get mostly blank stares. You hear answers like: I just did it because I had to. Most people seem unable to share useful knowledge on how they reinvented themselves.

If anything is clear about the 21st century, it’s that change happens faster than it used to. Reinvention isn’t something to be done only as a last resort. It’s something we need to do all the time in order to stay relevant in a rapidly changing world. We have to make personal reinvention safer and easier to manage. Reinvention has become an important life skill.

If we wait until we have no choice but to reinvent ourselves it’s too late. It’s sad beyond words to see how many people and families have been devastated by the latest economic downturn. Politicians may take credit as the unemployment rate improves but we know better. Good high wage jobs with career ladders are few and far between. People not seeking work and the underemployed aren’t counted in the unemployment rate and their numbers are growing. The gap between the skills of our workforce and the needs of a new economy are also growing. If we wait for our political and institutional leaders to act we will be waiting a long time. If we wait for things to return to the way they used to be, we will be waiting forever. Everything about our current economy screams for making personal reinvention more of a natural act.

Why aren’t we taught how to reinvent ourselves in school? Reinvention is imperative as a life skill. You would think we would at least be exposed to the fundamentals of personal exploration and reinvention while we are in school. Instead we seem increasingly focused on the skills necessary to get a specific job, a job that is highly unlikely to exist five years from now. As a society we highly prize specialty education pathways that track students toward narrow career choices instead of celebrating education pathways emphasizing a broad platform and skill set useful in doing future work that doesn’t exist today. Education and workforce development programs should emphasize foundational life skills that are transferable and enabling the personal confidence and skills to constantly reinvent ourselves.

Reinvention is a journey, not a destination. It doesn’t have to be a scary word. You don’t have to know what you’re reinventing yourself into, in order to work on reinventing yourself. It isn’t about stopping one thing in order to do or be something else. It’s about spending time every day, every month and every year constantly reinventing. It’s about personal R&D to explore and test new possibilities. It’s about experimenting all the time to uncover latent opportunities. It’s about continuing to strengthen our current selves while simultaneously working on our future selves by actively engaging in new ideas, environments and practices. You don’t have to stop doing what you’re currently doing; you just have to allow yourself the freedom to try more stuff.

Here are 15 things you can do now to start building reinvention muscle:

1. Hang out in places where more collisions with unusual suspects are likely to happen. Stop hanging with usual suspects!

2. Create a list of new stuff you’ve always wanted to try or be able to do. Start working the list today.

3. Make something and try to sell it online. We can all be makers and entrepreneurs even if society has tried to convince us otherwise.

11. Audit a class in a surprising subject area, the more experiential the better.

12. Figure out how to sell something you don’t need anymore online. Ask any millennial, they know how to do it!

13. Travel to places you haven’t been before and really experience the community. Avoid being a tourist!

14. Volunteer on the opposite side of town from where you live. Leverage volunteering to both be helpful and to learn new skills.

15. Explore art if you’re a scientist. Explore science if you’re an artist. Explore both if you’re in business!

Stop thinking about reinvention as a scary, all-or-nothing proposition. Reinvention is a life skill – a lifelong journey we’re all embarked on, whether we like it or not. There are many practical steps we can take every day to explore our future selves. We can all develop the life skill of reinvention. What are we waiting for? Try more stuff.

This post originally appeared on Medium. com. Saul Kaplan is the?Founder & Chief Catalyst of BIF, the Business Innovation Factory.?The Business Innovation Factory 2015 Summit – one of the most exciting, creative and intimate gatherings of innovators, storytellers and troublemakers – will take place in Providence, Rhode Island, on Sept 16-17.